Shawn Christy, the Schuylkill County man captured last month in Ohio after a summer-long police chase on charges he threatened public officials, will be back in the Keystone State by Tuesday, officials said Friday.

“That’s our scheduled date for return to Pennsylvania,” said U.S. Marshal Brian Fitzgibbon, enforcement supervisor in Cleveland, Ohio. “It should be by Tuesday that he’s returned.”

PHOTO GALLERY: Scenes from the manhunt for Shawn Christy, the McAdoo, Pa., man whose threats against President Trump and others prompted a three-month long manhunt. He was captured near Mansfield, Ohio, on Friday, Sept. 21, 2018.

Christy, 26, of McAdoo, will be taken to Scranton to face the federal charges of threatening President Donald J. Trump, Northampton County District Attorney John Morganelli and other officials, and illegal possession of a pistol.

Christy was taken into custody Sept. 21 near Mansfield, Ohio, after a manhunt that began June 6, when Schuylkill County issued an arrest warrant, and expanded June 19, after he allegedly posted a Facebook threat to Trump.

He had a loaded .380 caliber handgun, a large knife and a cellphone when he was caught, officials said.

Federal, state, county and local officials pursued Christy through six states, and briefly into Canada, before he was apprehended. He is believed to be in federal custody in Oklahoma, but Fitzgibbon declined to confirm his current location.

Karen Christy, Christy’s mother, said Friday she expected a phone call from him Thursday night, but he didn’t call, “which makes me think they [the U.S. marshals] are moving him.”

She said Christy is doing well, but he came out of the long manhunt with a badly injured knee and a tooth that is cracked below the gum line, and neither problem has been treated, except with pain pills.

The tooth is bothering him more than the knee, she said.

“For the most part, about 90 percent, he’s in good spirits,” she said. “Every once in a while, he would get down and frustrated, but that’s to be expected. We try to keep him going. When I talk with him, I’ve been telling him all the support he’s been getting.”

Fitzgibbon said Christy’s capture, five days after he ditched a stolen utility truck along Interstate 71 near Mansfield, was the result of “boots on the ground,” the leg work of federal marshals, the Ohio State Highway Patrol and several other police agencies.

“It was 100 percent police officers on foot that got him,” he said. “Many of the team members that were doing this were specialists in tracking.” He said the trackers found signs that someone had taken shelter outdoors, and skillfully narrowed their search until the arrest was made.

Reports that police planted a cellphone in the woods for Christy to pick up, and then tracked him down with a “ping” signal, are false, Fitzgibbon said.

He recalled that Christy seemed “relieved” when police, assisted by search dogs, took him into custody in a ravine between large rocks and a streambed, about 6 miles northeast of Mansfield.

“He was relieved that this was finally over,” Fitzgibbon said. “He said, ‘I made the mistake of coming to Mansfield, Ohio, because you guys don’t give up.’

“He said we didn’t mess around, and he couldn’t get away. On scene, he was very pleasant, very mild-mannered. He wasn’t a problem at all. He was a gentleman.”

Once returned to Pennsylvania, Christy first would face the federal charges. It’s not clear yet when he would face the several counts of burglary and car theft that piled up during his months on the lam.

He also remains charged with aggravated assault for allegedly swinging a stick at then-McAdoo Mayor Stephan Holly on March 15, 2017. Christy has insisted the assault charge was based on falsified evidence.

As the assault case headed to trial this year, Christy allegedly failed to show up for jury selection May 30, prompting the county arrest warrant, which was followed by a federal warrant and the search into West Virginia, Kentucky, Maryland, New York and Ohio.

Karen Christy said that, once her son is back in Pennsylvania, he could be held in Lackawanna County Jail in Scranton, but she’d prefer that he be moved to Allenwood Federal Prison in Union County.

Dawn Mayko, spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Scranton, said Friday she could not confirm that Christy will be in federal court there on Tuesday.